Battle of Ebelsberg

Battle of Ebelsberg
Part of the War of the Fifth Coalition

Battle of Ebelsberg by Dietrich Monten, 1825
Date3 May 1809[1]
Location48°18′11″N 14°17′26″E / 48.30306°N 14.29056°E / 48.30306; 14.29056
Result French victory
Belligerents
 Austrian Empire  French Empire
Commanders and leaders
Austrian Empire Johann von Hiller France André Masséna
Strength
22,000–30,000,[1] 70 guns 22,100–30,000,[1] 20–48 guns
Casualties and losses
4,495[1]–8,340 3,605–6,000[1]
Battle of Ebelsberg is located in Europe
Battle of Ebelsberg
Location within Europe
Map
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200km
125miles
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  current battle
  Napoleon in command
  Napoleon not in command

The Battle of Ebelsberg, known in French accounts as the Battle of Ebersberg,[a] was fought on 3 May 1809 during the War of the Fifth Coalition, part of the Napoleonic Wars. The Austrian left wing under the command of Johann von Hiller took up positions at Ebersberg on the Traun river. The French under André Masséna attacked, crossing a heavily defended 550-meter-long bridge and subsequently conquering the local castle, thus forcing Hiller to withdraw. Ebelsberg is now a southern suburb of Linz, situated on the south bank of the Traun, a short distance above the place where that stream flows into the Danube River.

Separated from the main Austrian army by the battles of Abensberg and Landshut, Feldmarschall-Leutnant Hiller retreated east to Linz by 2 May with the three left wing corps. The Austrians hoped to slow the French advance towards Vienna. The leading elements of Marshal Masséna's corps overran Hiller's rear guard on the west bank of the Traun on the morning of 3 May. In the rout that followed, the first French infantry brigade rushed the bridge and got into the streets of Ebelsberg. At this point, the Austrians began to fight back effectively.

To keep from being thrown into the river, the French committed an entire division to the street fight, in which the Ebelsberg castle loomed as the key position. After Masséna threw in a second division, the French finally ejected the Austrians from the castle. Unwilling to recapture the town, Hiller ordered his artillery to set fire to the place. In the blaze that followed, hundreds of wounded soldiers from both armies died. The battle and the heavy casualties were unnecessary because Hiller was already flanked out of position by a second French corps that crossed the Traun upstream.

  1. ^ a b c d e Bodart 1908, p. 401.
  2. ^ Petre 1976, p. 232.


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